Assigned as pen pals in middle school to practice cursive, two students formed a connection that quietly endured for more than six decades. What began as a classroom exercise evolved into a ritual of handwritten letters, holiday cards and occasional phone calls that traced life's milestones — marriages, moves, careers, births and losses. They adapted as technology changed, adding emails and calls, but the letters remained treasured artifacts of a steady friendship. After more than sixty years of correspondence, the pair finally met face-to-face on September 15th. Their reunion turned a lifetime of ink and paper into a warm, real-world embrace that proved lasting bonds can outlast time and distance.
From Cursive Practice to a Reunion: Two Pen Pals Meet After 60 Years

It began as a short-term class project: a teacher paired students as pen pals to teach cursive handwriting. Two of those students kept writing long after the assignment ended, turning occasional homework notes into a decades-long correspondence. Their letters documented everyday details and major milestones , new jobs, family additions, health scares and quiet joys. Through postal stamps, holiday envelopes and eventually emails, their friendship persisted. On September 15th they met for the first time in person, closing a six-decade loop. The meeting was full of laughter, tears and the small, intimate moments that only a lifetime of shared words can foster.